Month: August 2018

Australia faces increased blackout risks this summer as coal plants age #StopAdani #NoNewCoal #auspol #qldpol

MELBOURNE (Reuters) – The risk of blackouts in Australia’s upcoming summer has grown from last year as aging coal-fired power plants have become less reliable, the nation’s energy market operator said on Friday, calling for more power investment in the next few years.

The Australian Energy Market Operator’s (AEMO) latest outlook underscores worries about the country’s grid just days after the government’s signature energy policy to boost power reliability, lower emissions and cut prices collapsed amid political turmoil.

“Close collaboration with industry in the lead up and throughout summer will be key to reducing the risks of energy supply shortfalls,” AEMO Managing Director Audrey Zibelman said in a statement.

Australia’s southeastern states suffered a string of blackouts in 2016 and 2017, the worst of which hit the entire state of South Australia and shut global miner BHP’s Olympic Dam copper mine for two weeks, costing it $105 million.

AEMO sees the states of Victoria and South Australia most at risk of outages in the 2018-19 summer, which runs from December through February, with some risk in the most populous state, New South Wales, where a severe drought could deplete hydropower.

Electricity demand typically jumps over the summer as households and businesses crank up air conditioning.

The Bureau of Meteorology has not issued its forecast for this summer yet, but has said that temperatures this spring are likely to be warmer than average.

“The forecast risk of load-shedding in 2018-19 has increased since the 2017 (outlook), primarily because modeling has now factored in a reduction in thermal generation reliability observed in recent years,” AEMO said.

Unexpected outages at coal-fired plants have forced Australia’s biggest power user, the Tomago aluminum smelter, partly owned by Rio Tinto, to cut output several times this year, as it looked to avoid sharp price spikes when Sydney was on the verge of blackouts.

“(Without shoring up reserves), there would be a risk of involuntary load-shedding during summer peak periods in Victoria from this summer, in New South Wales from 2023-24 and in South Australia from 2024-25,” AEMO said.

AEMO is repeating steps from last summer when it lined up back-up supply and paid big energy users to cut energy use at times when the system was short on supply.

As Australia’s aging coal-fired generators, which supply more than 70 percent of the market’s electricity, get closer to retiring starting in 2022, the market will need to find new sources beyond those already planned to avert outages.

“The results emphasize the need for an investment landscape which supports the development of the portfolio of resources required to replace retiring generation,” AEMO said.

Reporting by Sonali Paul; Editing by Joseph Radford

Press link for more: Reuters.com

Lowering #airpollution just a bit would increase life expectancy as much as eradicating lung and breast cancer. #auspol #qldpol #StopAdani #NoNewCoal

Lowering air pollution just a bit would increase life expectancy as much as eradicating lung and breast cancer

By Zoë SchlangerAugust 23, 2018

Exposure to a prevalent type of air pollution—particulate matter called PM2.5—takes one year off the average global lifespan, according to research published Wednesday (Aug. 22) in the journal Environmental Science & Technology Letters. But that air pollution is not evenly distributed; for people living in the most-polluted areas of Asia and Africa, the situation is worse—life expectancy for them drops between one year and two months to one year and 11 months.

What’s more, simply reducing global PM2.5 air pollution to levels recommended by the World Health Organization would be the equivalent of globally eradicating breast and lung cancer in terms of life spans.

PM2.5 is released from tailpipes of vehicles, coal-fired power plants, and industrial plants of all kinds. Events like dust storms and wildfires produce large amounts of the particulate matter, too.

Right now, 95% of the global population are exposed to levels of PM2.5 that exceed the WHO’s recommended level, the authors write.

The researchers from the University of Texas, University of British Columbia, Brigham Young University in Utah, Imperial College London and the Boston-based Health Effects Institute used a massive data set known as the Global Burden of Disease Study, which includes more than 1 billion data points on the health and mortality of people in all 195 countries on Earth. The data in the most recent edition of the study, and the one used by the researchers, was published in 2016 and covers 1990 to 2015.

The life-expectancy findings build on a previous study using the same data, in which researchers found that exposure to PM2.5 was the fifth-highest mortality risk factor in 2015.

Exposure to PM2.5 caused 4.2 million deaths that year globally, and the loss of 103.1 million life-years, after adjusting for disabilities. That was the equivalent of 7.6% of all deaths worldwide that year.

That study also found that death rates from air pollution had increased: They calculated 3.5 million people died globally from breathing PM2.5 in 1990—700,000 fewer people than were killed by the same type of air pollution in 2015. That uptick, the researcher wrote, was likely “due to population ageing, changes in non-communicable disease rates, and increasing air pollution in low-income and middle-income countries.”

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Australia is devastated by #drought, yet it won’t budge on #climatechange #auspol #qldpol #nswpol #StopAdani #NoNewCoalh

Australia is devastated by drought, yet it won’t budge on climate change

By Angela Dewan, CNN

Australia is suffering its worst drought in living memory, as dozens of bushfires are blazing out of control.

It’s hard to believe that it’s winter “down under.” Summer is yet to come.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull on Sunday committed 1.8 billion Australian dollars ($1.3 billion) in relief funds for farmers, whose livelihoods are disappearing down the cracks of their dry, barren land.

The very next day, he announced he was dropping a national policy to cut carbon emissions from the energy sector that was supposed to help Australia fulfill its obligations under the Paris climate change agreement.

The vast majority of Australians accept human-induced climate change is real and scientists have linked the current record-slashing drought to global warming, yet the subject is still highly controversial in Australian politics, and climate change skepticism is still given political space.

Turnbull is now facing a renewed leadership challenge from MP Peter Dutton.

If Turnbull loses, he would be the third Australian prime minister to be ousted over climate policy in the past decade.

A Dutton-led Australia would mean even less hope for those who want action on climate change.

Peter Dutton: The immigration hardliner who could be Australia’s next PM

It’s difficult to comprehend why Australia — a wealthy, developed nation that has long experienced crippling weather events — has failed time and time again to get a coherent climate change plan together.

All the signs are there. The UNESCO heritage-listed Great Barrier Reef, a 2,300-kilometer stretch rich in biodiverse marine life, is under threat, having lost more than half its coral in two mass bleaching events in 2016 and 2017.

Australia’s Great Barrier reef is under threat.

Australia clocked record heat in the first half of this year. The whole of New South Wales, the country’s most populous state, is now 100% in drought, with some areas seeing less than 10mm of rain in July, right in the middle of winter.

It’s so dry that animals are being forced to migrate — a group of emus recently swarmed the town of Broken Hill, running down the street and gate crashing football matches in search of water and food, the Australian ABC reported.

Political survival

Political wrangling is one reason for the slow progress. Turnbull scrapped his climate policy in order to ensure his survival as prime minister.

“The history of Australian politics is that climate policy has proven in the past to be so controversial that it has resulted in prime ministers losing their jobs,” said Bob Ward, policy director at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics.

“Australians can see for themselves what’s going on at the moment.

They’re facing a series of weather events linked to climate change — droughts, heatwaves, fires — and Australia’s scientific communities have been telling politicians for a long time what’s going on.”

Instead of talking about global warming, the ruling Liberal Party’s conservative faction, that has long resisted climate action, has framed the debate around electricity prices.

Dutton said Tuesday that should he became leader he would set up an inquiry exploring why power was so pricey.

A study published in the journal Nature Climate Change found that Australians who identify with the country’s conservative party are more likely to be predisposed to climate change skepticism.

Of all 25 nations studied, only the United States had a stronger correlation between political ideology and belief in global warming.

It also found that link between political leaning and climate change skepticism was typically present in countries with strong fossil fuel industries, including the US, Australia, Canada and Brazil, indicating the power of industry lobbying.

Much of that lobbying happens through think tanks funded by the mining and energy industries, said John Cook, from the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University.

“The broad picture in Australia is that in the ’80s the issue was much less polarized.

It was in the early 1990s that conservative think tanks began attacking climate science for ideological reasons, because the consequence of climate change meant regulating industry,” Cook said.

That combination of ideology and climate change skepticism is most apparent in former prime minister Tony Abbott, now a backbench MP but the most vocal critic of Turnbull’s carbon reduction policy.

Abbott pointed to the US President Donald Trump’s announcement to withdraw the US from the Paris agreement as a reason for Australia to scrap its own emissions targets, saying last week, “it’s time to get out of Paris.”

Tony Abbott, right, during his time as prime minister, with Malcolm Turnbull, who ousted Abbott from the premiership.

Abbott gave a speech to a climate-skeptic think tank in London last year, in which he made the remarkable claim that climate change was “probably doing good, or at least, more good than harm,” and likened climate change action to “primitive people” who killed goats to appease volcano gods.

He has even called for new coal power stations to be built by the federal government.

Australia’s coal addiction

Turnbull’s energy policy was aimed at bringing the country in line with its commitment to cut carbon emissions by 26% by 2030, from 2005 levels, as Australia pledged in the Paris climate change agreement.

Australians support the agreement and climate change action more broadly — until it hits their wallets, polls show.

A Newspoll survey published in The Australian newspaper in October 2017, for example, found almost half of those polled would support dropping out of the Paris climate change agreement if it lowered energy prices.

“(Climate action) has taken too long because of the political influence of the coal industry, and as a result … a significant rump of the current government either don’t believe in climate change or don’t believe Australia should do anything,” Ian Lowe, Emeritus Professor at Griffith University’s School of Science, told CNN.

Coal sits at the Hay Point and Dalrymple Bay Coal Terminals south of the Queensland town of Mackay in Australia.

Australia is regularly referred to at the world’s biggest coal exporter, and it depends heavily on the fossil fuel in its own energy mix, as well as for jobs and economic prosperity. Mining has contributed significantly to the country’s record-breaking 26 consecutive years of economic growth.

Much of Australia’s coal is exported to China, to fuel the Asian powerhouse’s rapid development. But even China is starting to wean itself off dirty fossil fuel and is looking increasingly to renewable energy.

Australia is getting a renewable energy program off the ground, but a lack of political will has meant progress has been incredibly slow, said Harald Heubaum, an energy and climate policy expert at the University of London. The huge potential in the sunny country for solar energy is still largely unrealized.

“So a question Australia could ask is, does it really just want to be a quarry for Asia? To take the coal and gas and iron ore, and whatever precious metals it can find and export them?” Heubaum said.

“Or does it want to diversify away from that?”

CNN’s Ben Westcott contributed to this report.

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#LNP “A party too divided to rule” #auspol #qldpol #nswpol #ClimateChange #StopAdani #NoNewCoal

A party too divided to rule

TIM COLEBATCH

21 AUGUST 2018

The Liberal Party is in crisis.

The risk is that whoever emerges as its leader — and maybe that will be neither Malcolm Turnbull nor Peter Dutton — could take over a party and a government too divided to lead Australia anywhere.

In politics, disunity is death.

Labor is already an odds-on bet to be in government within months.

A disunited Coalition could be facing a long period in opposition.

That is now its normal place in Australian politics.

In the thirty-five years since Bob Hawke led Labor to victory in 1983, Labor has governed most of the time, at national level and in all six states. The Howard era was the outstanding exception; but John Howard has been the only Liberal leader since 1983, federal or state, to win more than two terms.

Once the natural parties of government, the Liberals and Nationals have become the natural parties of opposition. And many of them are at home in that role.

As Norman Abjorensen has argued, politics on the right has become “a form of cultural protest” as much as a movement that aims at winning political power.

But why did this happen?

How did a Coalition that dominated Australian government for most of our history become so divided that it cannot agree on a policy to tackle climate change — an issue that is not even a partisan matter in most Western countries?

All parties of any size are coalitions of people with differing views.

The larger the party, the wider the range of views. There’s nothing unusual about that; Robert Menzies too had his dissidents. There will always be some on the left of the party and some on the right; that’s natural. It’s a question of how their differences are handled.

In the Liberals’ golden era of the fifties and sixties, leaders were in a strong position to shape the terms of consensus on issues.

The party rooms were full of men who had served in the war and were used to respecting authority.

Politics was less intense, and leaders had more time to spend with ministers and backbenchers, define the consensus, and make it stick.

The Liberals and the Country Party of the time were parties of the centre right. Menzies was not averse to compromise. When he retired as prime minister, the journalist Alan Reid wrote that to call Menzies a conservative was to stretch the meaning of the word to the limit. “On his record, probably the most accurate description of him within the framework of domestic politics is that he is a cautious reformer,” Reid wrote.

John McEwen, the dominant Country Party leader in that era, achieved one of the greatest transformations of Australian policy when he persuaded his party and the Liberals to set aside their strong anti-Japanese feelings in 1957 to approve a trade agreement with Japan. Labor, which claims to be the internationalist party, opposed the deal, but McEwen — in the end, backed by Menzies — had the courage to take on his own side of politics and make them see that realities had changed, and they had to let go of their old antagonisms and move on. Labor eventually followed.

Thirty years later, another conservative was the first political leader to take seriously the risks of climate change.

Margaret Thatcher was a cultural warrior of the first order. But she was also a former researcher in chemistry, the first British prime minister with a science degree.

As PM, she was instrumental in setting up the intergovernmental panel on climate change — although later, in a retirement that sadly ended in senility, she changed sides to line up with her fellow cultural warriors.

But the example she set in office stuck.

Britain under its conservative government today is phasing out coal and has become a global leader in renewable energy.

Germany under chancellor Angela Merkel, another conservative, is now generating almost 40 per cent of its power from renewables.

France under its last conservative leader Nicolas Sarkozy had similar ambitions. The United States, of course, is on a totally different path, but it is alone in that.

So why is Australian conservatism so different?

It’s hard to disagree when Norman Abjorensen argues that part of the problem is that contemporary conservatism has no “cohesive set of beliefs or values,” and can unite only in opposition to others’ policies.

Tony Abbott is a prime example: as a student politician in the seventies, his crusade was against feminism. As opposition leader, he crusaded against an emissions trading scheme (and much else). And now, as a Liberal backbencher, his crusade is against the man who overthrew him as prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull.

When rising temperatures forced climate change onto the political agenda, the reaction of most Australian conservatives — and crucially, John Howard — was to treat it as pure politics. Global warming was a core issue for their political opponents: that in itself was reason to reject it. Taking action would hurt the interests of Coalition donors in mining and related industries; that too was reason to reject it.

What science told us was irrelevant. Geologists like Bob Carter and Ian Plimer were paraded by conservatives as if they were experts on atmospheric physics and chemistry. A culture of denialism took root, dignified as “scepticism” — which it wasn’t, as sceptics are open to evidence, and the denialists weren’t. The evidence of global warming is now overwhelming. But how many of those Howard-era “sceptics” have accepted that evidence?

Howard himself did in his last year or so in office, persuaded by his department head, Peter Shergold, and his ebullient young environment minister, Malcolm Turnbull. He and his cabinet committed Australia to an emissions trading scheme. (Alas, in retirement, Howard, like Thatcher, has slid back into the camp of the cultural warriors and denialists.)

The Coalition’s commitment to act against climate change was shallow, and grew weaker as Kevin Rudd cynically used the issue to try to divide the opposition rather than seek national unity on “the greatest moral challenge of our time.” Rudd never condescended to negotiate with the Greens, and negotiated with the Coalition only when it became clear that he needed its numbers to get the bill through the Senate. It was too late. The Liberal party room dumped Turnbull as leader, and Abbott became his successor, pledging to block emissions trading or anything like it.

On the eve of that party-room vote, I wrote in the Age:

Make no mistake. The division that has opened up in the Coalition on climate change could cripple it for a decade. This is the worst threat to Coalition unity in our lifetime… Whoever leads the Liberals, there is only one way this dispute could end. One day, all of them will have to agree that global warming is a problem that governments cannot ignore, and support emissions trading or a carbon tax to fight it.

I got two things wrong. Like most people, I expected Joe Hockey to emerge from the party room as the new leader. And I assumed that the Coalition would have a showdown long before now to end its denialism and forge a genuine climate change policy. That has been postponed, so that the decade in which disunity on climate change will cripple it has only just begun.

It’s easy to blame Turnbull for this. But many others share the blame — above all, three successive leaders of the Nationals, who have insisted that Turnbull take little or no action. The main victims of climate change in Australia, as we are seeing, are the farmers. For decades they have been the Nationals’ core constituency. But in the past decade, their political leaders have betrayed them to cosy up to the big money of the mining industry.

Lest we forget: when Malcolm Turnbull was elected Liberal leader in 2015, the Nationals’ leader, the otherwise sensible Warren Truss, demanded that he foreswear real action against climate change as the price of maintaining the Coalition. Turnbull, too eager to smooth the waters after his victory, promptly agreed. Possibly he felt he could renegotiate the deal from a stronger position after the 2016 election. Or possibly, he just wanted to be prime minister, and didn’t care what it took.

The ostrich faction of the Liberals is also to blame. The hotter the climate gets, the more of them seem to retreat into denialism. In most of Australia, the Liberals’ shrinking party branches increasingly comprise a narrow base of cultural protesters rather than the broad base of mainstream Australians they had when national development was the issue.

Whoever leads the Liberals into the next election will confront the same dilemma as Turnbull. Australia is the second-biggest emitter per capita of greenhouse gases in the G20, behind only Saudi Arabia. In Paris, Abbott pledged to reduce Australia’s total emissions in 2030 to at least 26 per cent below 2005 levels. We cannot walk away from that.

(The deputy prime minister and my ABC colleagues might note: that pledge was to reduce our total emissions by 26 per cent, not just emissions from the electricity sector. As I have pointed out in a table here, total emissions and emissions from electricity generation are moving in very different directions. We cannot reduce our total emissions by 26 per cent without making much bigger cuts to emissions from the electricity sector.)

Turnbull could have handled it much better. In hindsight, he must regret allowing the Nationals to tie his hands as the price of becoming PM. Nothing has damaged his credibility with voters more than his endless retreat from the commitments on climate change that once defined him in our eyes. He has survived this test of party-room support, but he will need a lot of luck or inspiration to get out of this escape room.

Turnbull was the Liberals’ big opportunity. He won them the 2016 election, and no other leader was more likely to steer the party back to the centre-right position it occupied in Menzies’s time. That is impossible now.

Both the Liberals and the Nationals need a new John McEwen, willing to sit down with his own MPs and senators and, by persuasion or banging heads, get them to see that realities have changed, and they need to let go their old antagonisms, and move on.

That could be a decade away. Until then, the Liberals and Nationals appear headed for another spell in opposition, and it could be a long one. •

TIM COLEBATCH

Tim Colebatch is a regular contributor to Inside Story, a former economics editor and columnist for the Age, and the biographer of former Victorian premier Sir Rupert (Dick) Hamer, the last Liberal premier to win more than two elections.

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Trump Coal Plan Will Kill 1,400 Americans a Year #StopAdani #NoNewCoal #ClimateChange #AirPollution

Trump Administration Says Trump Coal Plan Will Kill 1,400 Americans a Year

By Jonathan Chait

Donald Trump. Photo: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

Coal is a dirty fuel.

Not only does it contain far more carbon than other energy sources, it also contains other kinds of pollutants.

The non-carbon pollution effects are a crucial cause of coal’s decline.

It’s why Chinese cities, so choked with pollution that you can barely breath outside, are phasing out coal.

The Obama administration helped drive coal plants out of business by regulating those pollution sources more strictly.

Trump’s energy plan, unveiled last night, is to deregulate coal in hopes of staving off its demise.

Trump justifies the policy on the grounds that coal miners are wonderful people, windmills kill (and are somehow killed by) birds, and climate science is a hoax.

Melt the glaciers to own the liberals. But there’s an important side effect to his pro-coal policy: keeping more coal-fired plants around means keeping more of the other kinds of pollution around in addition to carbon dioxide.

The New York Times peered into the internal documents written by Trump’s own Environmental Protection Agency, and it finds the additional pollution will kill a projected 1,400 Americans a year.

As the EPA delicately puts it, “Implementing the proposed rule is expected to increase emissions of carbon dioxide and the level of emissions of certain pollutants in the atmosphere that adversely affect human health.” But killing 1,400 Americans a year is the price we have to pay rather than live with wind turbines that will kill a fraction of a percent of the bird population.

Press link for more: NYMAG.COM

Josh Frydenberg Australia’s Minister for Environment loves coal.

How Coal Kills

Pollution from coal-fired power plants can be hazardous to the health of those living nearby.

Coal combustion plants account for more than half of Americans’ electric power generation.

According to Coal’s Assault on Human Health, a report by the non-profit Physicians for Social Responsibility (PSR), coal combustion releases mercury, nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide and other substances known to be hazardous to human health.

The report evaluates the impacts of coal pollution on our respiratory, cardiovascular and nervous systems and concludes that air pollutants produced by coal combustion contribute to asthma, lung cancer, congestive heart failure and strokes.

“The findings of this report are clear: While the U.S. relies heavily on coal for its energy needs, the consequences of that reliance for our health are grave,” says Alan Lockwood, a principal author of the report and a professor of neurology at the University at Buffalo.

The PSR report further illustrates the adverse effects of the mining of coal on the environment, water and human health. Coal mining leads U.S. industries in fatal injuries, and miners have suffered prolonged health issues, such as black lung disease, which causes permanent scarring of the lung tissues. Surface mining destroys forests and groundcover, leading to flooding and soil erosion. Mountaintop removal mining—used widely across southern Appalachia—can bury streams with rubble and, in turn, harm aquatic ecosystems.

Waterways may also become contaminated due to the storage of post-combustion wastes from coal plants, also known as “coal ash.” There are 584 coal ash storage sites in the United States, and toxic residues have migrated into water supplies at dozens of them.

“Coal ash is a silent killer,” says Barbara Gottlieb, director of environment and health at PSR. “Communities are drinking contaminated water laced with toxic chemicals that poison humans.”

According to the U.S. Department of Energy, coal plants can reduce sulfur oxide, nitrogen oxide and greenhouse-gas emissions by using biomass as a supplemental fuel in existing coal boilers.

A Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) report says that tree limbs and tops normally left behind after timber harvesting operations, and otherwise unmarketable materials like dead, damaged and small-diameter trees, can be collected for biomass energy use. Income from selling biomass can pay for or partially offset the cost of forest management treatments needed to remove invasive species or reduce the threat of fires.

Utilities like New Hampshire’s Northern Wood Power are taking a lead in putting biomass energy to work in their power plants. In 2006, the company replaced a 50-megawatt coal-burning boiler in Portsmouth with one that uses wood chips and other wood materials for fuel. The result has been a reduction in coal use by more than 130,000 tons annually, reduced air emissions by more than 400,000 tons annually and the development of a thriving wood chip market for New Hampshire’s forest industry.

Retrofitting coal-fired power plants to burn biomass makes sense for utilities trying to be greener while keeping their existing facilities productive, but environmental leaders stress that the federal government should provide more incentives for switching over to even greener energy sources like solar or wind.

Press link for more: Scientific American

A Climate Reckoning for Australia #auspol #qldpol #nswpol #StopAdani #NoNewCoal #ClimateChange

The prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, barely survived a leadership challenge after trying to enact a modest measure to reduce climate-altering emissions.

By The Editorial Board

The editorial board represents the opinions of the board, its editor and the publisher. It is separate from the newsroom and the Op-Ed section.

Australia should be a global leader in battling climate change.

The vast nation-continent has an abundance of potential solar and tidal power, while the bleaching of the spectacular Great Barrier Reef by warming waters and a record drought offer ample evidence of what climate change can wreak.

In advance of a critical vote on a new energy bill, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull wisely noted that it is well known “what happens when you allow ideology and idiocy to take charge of energy policy.”

Yet right after saying that, Mr. Turnbull, under pressure from rebellious conservatives in his party, abandoned his “National Energy Guarantee” and its modest effort to reduce energy emissions.

Rebellious conservatives hold Australia to ransom.

With that, he appeared to confirm Australia as a poster child for something completely different, as reported by Damien Cave in The Times on Tuesday: a political inability to enact sorely needed energy legislation because of acute partisanship on addressing climate change and the influence of a coal industry that accounts for more than a third of all global coal exports.

Though recent Australian governments have been reasonably progressive on many of the issues that have tested other democracies, such as gun control, health care and wages, and Mr. Turnbull’s achievements include legalizing same-sex marriage, the bitter divisions over climate change have led to the fall of two prime ministers in the past decade. By jettisoning his energy bill, Mr. Turnbull narrowly escaped becoming the third, at least for now.

The volatility, Mr. Cave wrote, is explained at least in part by ideological ties to coal and by its enormous lobbying machine. The result is that any mention of emissions control, or even well-established climate science, prompts a violent allergic reaction on the right. That is what Mr. Turnbull referred to as “ideology and idiocy,” before he fell prey to its power.

Josh Frydenberg Minister for Environment loves coal.

The description is utterly apt, for Australia as it is for the United States, where President Trump has rashly pulled the United States out of the Paris climate accord and has maliciously undercut critical environmental regulations.

On Tuesday, Andrew Wheeler, the acting administrator of Mr. Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency, announced a plan to prop up coal-burning plants that would, by the agency’s own reckoning, lead to hundreds of additional deaths a year from respiratory diseases.

Australia, at least, has not pulled out of the Paris agreement — though America’s withdrawal is cited by Australian conservatives as an argument against setting emissions targets — and it remains committed to reduce energy emission levels in 2030 to 26 percent below those of 2005.

Australian businesses, moreover, are clamoring for a consistent energy policy, and one recent poll found that 59 percent of Australians say steps should be taken against global warming even if they are costly.

Ideology and idiocy, of course, are not limited to climate policy or to any country. But it is especially dismaying when science-denying hacks and self-serving industries block action that is in the obvious and urgent interest of all humanity. That should not be happening in Australia.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook and Twitter (@NYTOpinion), and sign up for the Opinion Today newsletter.

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Australia’s science leaders reissue their call for stronger action on #climatechange #auspol #qldpol #nswpol #Drought #Bushfire #StopAdani #NoNewCoal @SciNate

https://www.facebook.com/groups/435215796851135/permalink/657731334599579/

August 21, 2018

The Australian Academy of Science has reissued their call for the Australian Government to use the best available science to guide action on climate change.

The longer Australia delays decisive action towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions the more challenging that action will become.

Even if all the country commitments from the Paris Agreement are met, the best interpretation of the latest data shows that by the end of the century the global climate is likely to be 3°C above pre-industrial levels.

This is substantially higher than the Paris target to limit warming to less than 2°C and would have profound impacts affecting billions of people throughout the world.

The Academy stands ready to assist the Australian Government by continuing to provide sound scientific advice on issues relating to climate change.

The science clearly indicates that avoiding the worst impacts of climate change will require concerted global action to reduce atmospheric carbon.

The Commonwealth Academies of Science Consensus Statement on Climate Change, published earlier this year, represents the consensus views of tens of thousands of scientists. It marks the first time Commonwealth nations have come together to urge their Governments to take further action to achieve net-zero greenhouse gases emissions during the second half of the 21st Century.

View The Commonwealth Academies of Science Consensus Statement on Climate Change.

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#Climatechange heightens need for disaster risk finance, insurance. #StopAdani #NoNewCoal @aistbuzz @ANZ_AU @CommBank Risky Business

Recent natural disasters across the world have raised concern on the need to prepare for impact of climate change with insurance for risk mitigation.

While for many the extreme weather was no more than a mild inconvenience, for millions of small-scale farmers, their families and communities in vulnerable countries, climate change is already having a devastating impact.

It is clear there is an urgent need for climate and disaster risk finance and insurance which can build resilience and help mitigate the worst effects, according a report on Insurance Impact Network.

According to the recently-formed InsuResilience Global Partnership, 26 million people are forced into poverty each year as a result of climate-related disasters.

The Insurance Development Forum (IDF), launched two years ago, estimates that 70 percent of economic losses from natural hazards remain uninsured, and in middle- and low-income countries the uninsured proportion of economic losses often exceeds 90 percent.

None of this is new to the MiN, whose members have been collaborating to ensure greater resilience through insurance cover for more than ten years.

Working through a range of partnerships such as the UN Environment’s Principles for Sustainable Insurance (PSI) initiative, the MiN aims to close the insurance protection gap and build resilience to shocks through truly inclusive insurance. Since joining forces a year ago, the MiN and UN-PSI have worked together to support the development and expansion of sustainable, socially inclusive insurance services.

Given the essential role that inclusive insurance can play in achieving the SDGs, it is small wonder that new organisations and partnerships are coming into play. It’s encouraging to see increasing collaboration between civil society, governments, UN agencies, insurance companies and regulators. Stephan Opitz of long-standing MiN member KfW Development Bank welcomes new initiatives “to develop comprehensive and complementary solutions for and with our partners from civil society and the private sector. Solutions to give quick support to people who need it most in situations that are threatening their livelihoods”

Some, however, caution against focusing too much on insurance as a silver bullet to tackling climate change and natural disasters. Inclusive risk management strategies such as mitigation and prevention, which go ‘beyond insurance’ are just as important, says Josh Ling, director of Financial Inclusion at Mercy Corps, another member of the MiN. “Savings are an important tool to provide a buffer to smaller shocks, and can play a complementary role to insurance products. Risk mitigation solutions must be considered first and should seek ways to avoid the climate exposure altogether.”

“There are many tools and strategies for confronting climate risks,” says Ling. “However, whilst all efforts should be made to reduce exposure to climate hazards and avoid the effects to the greatest extent possible; this rarely avoids the risk completely. Inclusive insurance plays an important role to ensure that vulnerable populations are not faced with the financial consequences of natural disasters.”

Modestus  Anaesoronye

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In numbers: public’s attitude towards #climatechange #auspol #qldpol #drought #StopAdani #NoNewCoal Time for politicians & Media to wake up!

In numbers: the UK public’s attitudes towards climate change

In late July, environmental law firm ClientEarth and YouGov surveyed more than 2,000 UK adults on attitudes across a spectrum of climate-related questions. With the survey released on Monday (20 August), edie rounds-up the relevant facts and figures.

edie rounds up the key facts from ClientEarth’s survey

Undertaken by YouGov and commissioned by environment lawyers ClientEarth, the survey quizzed 2,005 UK adults on questions ranging from climate finance to personal desires to install low-carbon technologies at home.

With recent heatwaves finally alerting the public of the severity of climate change, the survey sheds new light on what the public views as the main drivers and barriers towards a low-carbon economy.

ClientEarth has embroiled the UK Government in various legal battles over a perceived lack of environmental stewardship and it appears that the public agrees that policymakers should be doing more to steer the agenda.

“These results make it clear that the British public wants action on climate change, and urgently,” ClientEarth’s chief executive, James Thornton, said. “People in this country also see a strong role for the courts in holding business and the government to account if they don’t act quickly enough.

“These results also have strong implications for business: the litigation risk for fossil fuel companies and those who invest in them is likely to grow and investors should take note – the costs of defending actions on climate change are likely to be substantial and the damages involved, should a company be required to pay, could be enormous.”

Acting as the “first thorough investigation of UK attitudes towards the deeper issues of climate change”, the survey acts as a snapshot on climate-related needs and desires. Here, edie rounds up the key facts from ClientEarth’s survey.

In numbers: the UK public’s attitudes towards climate change

In Australia the public is demanding climate action

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Unprecedented Crime: Review #auspol #qldpol #nswpol #Drought #Bushfire #Heatwave #Flood #ClimateChange #StopAdani #NoNewCoal

This review was first published by Resilience.org on February 16, 2018.

The original article can be found here.

Cover image for Unprecedented Crime by Peter D. Carter & Elizabeth Woodworth | Clarity Press

Seldom are missed books truly missed opportunities — but nothing could possibly be worse than missing an opportunity that could have saved your life, and those of your family and friends.

Unprecedented Crime: Climate Science Denial And Game Changers For Survival is just such a book that you shouldn’t miss in this increasingly post-truth age.

With chapter-after-chapter gut punch, it is a volume that reads like a UN science team jointly making a life-and-death 911 call recording to a planet of primed and waiting emergency responders: “We’ve hit bottom.

The situation is dire.

Time is short.

Ignore the criminal deniers, bankers, media and politicians!

We need to urgently mobilize millions now!”

In a time when common sense human survival is really becoming uncommon with worsening existential threats in the White House and in our atmosphere and oceans with each passing hour, British Columbia writers Dr. Peter Carter and Elizabeth Woodworth, as honest brokers of factual scientific information, expose for readers the moral and intellectual bankruptcy of Big Oil glory days and their approaching end of days.

Dr. James Hansen (the former NASA scientist, pioneering climate-prophet) provides a Foreword that is sure to give you the first twists and turns between nightmares and hope to be found in the book.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull

While arguably the most urgent issue of our time, climate change makes for a poor villain.

It is impersonal, and usually glacially slow.

However, there are uber-rich, faceless corporate villains lurking behind the rise in planet temperature who strive to ensure we all, in varying degrees, are part of the problem, by keeping the planet fossil-addicted.

Such corporate crime stirs the moral outrage of the authors like a legion of Nazis bent on similar world domination once stirred our grandparents.

Unprecedented Crime devotes the opening half of the book to deftly arguing that climate denial is not just immoral, that it is a willful act of global-scale violence, an unimaginably senseless and cruel act of climate battery against today’s vulnerable, and dispossessed, a fate which will surely only deepen and become dire for today’s youth and future generations.

It is a ‘policy breakout’ book deserving to be prominently placed on multiple library shelves from public health to climate adaptation to corporate criminology.

The writers chronicle how the billionaire-funded, but small denier community, has created an abrupt, near-death global experience, a life flashing before your eyes kind of thing, for the many facing record-shattering tornado swarms and hurricane force winds, to those barely escaping wildfire infernos with the clothes on their backs, and the palpably imaginable fear of others in flood-ravaged regions awaiting rescue from rooftops.

The trauma of denial was only less immediate but sadly gravely under-reported for drought-stricken subsistence farmers in many developing nations watching their crops shrivel and die during intense heatwaves, and poor fishers experiencing the slow asphyxiation of fish in warming oceans and disappearing lakes.

The fate of European climate refugees has become today’s fate of millions, human and non-human species seeking more and more migration to safe havens from deadly climate disruptions, habitat loss, and the conflicts which inevitably arise when resource scarcity becomes more acute on a hot planet.

While the definition of evil may change over time, as most governing parties anywhere in the world refuse to prohibit extraction of the oil and gas on their doorstep or fossil fuel imports due to the climate trivialization work of deniers and hydrocarbon-trafficking lobbyists, the authors ‘name and shame’ the deniers (and aiding and abetting bankers, media, shareholders and politicians) as among the evilest, downright dirty, and irredeemable corporate villains in the history of humanity.

Carter and Woodworth forcefully argue that it’s time for Big Oil ‘take-the-money and-run’ psychopaths to take full responsibility for the devastation they have wrought and to start paying for the unwise, unnecessary and unwanted global damage they have done and the moral confusion they have profitably cultivated.

Only a fool keeps on appealing to the better nature of a deaf thug, hence Carter and Woodsworth do not expect much more than the expected ongoing manufactured rage and lies of deniers, and the betrayal and treason of the political establishment, and reserve the remainder of their book to ‘game changers’ who have demonstrated the courage and prescience to pull the emergency brake on the runaway climate train, and offer additional solutions that can help democratize survival for the many.

To that end, these climate crimefighting authors controversially support the creativity, gumption and grit of greater civil unrest and civil disobedience necessary to get reticent world leaders and their citizenry to urgently respond to the Paris Climate Accord 1.5 C guardrail dying of Trump’s toxic political malabsorption, and Canada’s Trudeau threatening genocidal relapse into genteel apartheid for non-consenting indigenous communities confronting the tarsands and new pipelines.

Rest assured, history is not going to judge these leaders well.

Again, the real crime and legacy of unutterable shame is corporate and elected deniers suggesting indigenous and settler water protectors in our slowly decolonizing world commit a crime opposing new fossil fuel expansion (or the authors do by exposing planetary corporate ecocide and calling for concerted resistance, instead of rightfully receiving a civil courage award for their book).

Changing lifelong loyalties and habits is never easy, (especially if we’re still locked into a vexingly circular ‘glass half-full or half-empty of bitumen’ climate debate; as it turns out this shale bitumen barrel has no bottom) but is necessary if we want to have a habitable world for our gravely at-risk children and grandchildren.

Final takeaway for our ecologically ticking time bomb: If you’re feeling sadness or fury at the state of the world, the authors say put it to good use!

A no compromise, no retreat, no surrender, global climate mobilization is just what the doctor ordered.

This is not your first nor likely your final warning, but it is unerringly the most urgent in publication today — with very little time remaining.

Don’t wait for the final courtroom impact statements or climate collapse documentary.

Read the book before the climate denier bully mob have it banned and burned (but don’t be surprised, if half way through, it makes you want to go out and blow up a pipeline).

If read, the smart money is on you — making a difference that matters — a difference that won’t cultivate the denier lie that the climate emergency is a hoax (but hey, pro wrestling is real), and that there will always be someone else to save the world.

All readers of Unprecedented Crime should now consider yourselves ‘deputized’ to pursue by any means the lawlessness of carbon racketeers hiding in plain sight behind the autocratic corporate state.

If the law is to ensure human survival, everyday citizens must become the new vanguard pressing for a fundamentally just, democratic system change. Replacing complicity with conscience, together, we can again be both society’s sentinels and its tribunes.

Press link for more: MAHB.Stanford.edu